With the next edition of WordCamp Europe nearly upon us – just a reminder, it takes place on June 26-28 in Seville – we’ve been somewhat hastily looking around for a clever way of convincing you to attend this event.

Luckily, we were approached by Dragan Nikolic who offered to share what he thinks of WordCamp, how he benefited from the event, and why you should consider attending one too.

After all, the entry ticket is just €40 so it’s nothing like your usual tech/software conference that’s often $500+.

Enter Dragan

If conferences are not your thing, I understand. They were never mine either, but only until I attended WordCamp for the very first time. And at my third one, I actually got to speak. (more…)

— Sep 26th —

This year’s WordCamp Europe started a bit earlier than expected. Even though the official green light was given this morning (Sep 27th), things actually started happening yesterday evening.

That being said, the agenda wasn’t particularly tense as the most popular hashtag apart from #wceu was … wait for it … #beer. People seemed to be reaching out to other like-minded WordPress enthusiasts in hope of having a quick meet-up and talk some WordPress things over a nice cold beverage.

Fast forward to today’s morning.

— Sep 27th 8am —

Just like planned, the registration started at 8am, and the table looked quite impressive with all the name badges (sorry about the pic quality): (more…)

Roundup GitHub workflow • Choose a project on GitHub and fork it • Install Git on your local machine • Clone the project to your local machine • Do some work • Connect your local project to the original project on GitHub (step 3) • Fetch updates from the original project (step 4)

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Founded in June 2013 by Ionut Neagu, CodeinWP is a blog about all things WordPress. Every week, you can expect new tutorials, lists, comparison posts, and highly researched pieces that go into the inner workings of WordPress and how to get the most out of it. Learn more about CodeinWP here.